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  • I, New York
    Time Out New York / Issue 657 : Apr 30–May 6, 2008
    Map #011

    Letterboxing

    It’s all the rage in countries with nothing better to do (like England), and now that the hobby has finally grounded itself stateside, you have a legitimate excuse for exploring the city with a compass and shovel.

    By Marisa LaScala

    Illustration: Brendan Leach

    It’s superdorky, we know. But if you’re like us, you’re an adventurous superdork and nothing sounds more fun than racing all over the city in search of zero-value buried treasure.

    Letterboxing 101 goes like this: Enthusiasts hide, plant or otherwise obscure waterproof containers (each outfitted with a logbook and stamp) and design scavenger hunts so that people can find them. Cryptic clues are posted online (letterboxing.org, atlasquest.com); seekers crack the code, unearth the box, stamp the logbook, use the box’s stamp to mark their own journal and then stick the booty back where they found it.

    The sport is not without its challenges, and participants rarely talk about it (and not just ’cause it doesn’t help them get laid). One Upper East Sider who goes by the trail name SnapZ says, “I had a box hidden in a hollow log in Riverside Park. One day, I found a flashlight and scissors there. Drug dealer? Homeless person? I never found out.”

    Ready to letterbox? Here are a few clue excerpts for seven boxes across four boroughs.

    Illustration: Brendan Leach

    “Find the memorial and stand facing the spouting ram. Ascend the left staircase. Look left and down where granite meets metal, stone and cement. BYO ink—red would be best.”

    Illustration: Brendan Leach

    “Come, all of you, who / Engaged by this clue / Disembark in the park / As a whim, on a lark. / Reaching a knoll with a wide-open view / Here sits a bench that sits waiting for you.”

    Illustration: Brendan Leach

    “It lies near the end of Clark Street, at the end of the Promenade with the sundial, behind a stone wall, in the sprinkler system under the brush, on a muddy floor of dirt, under a green lid.”

    Illustration: Brendan Leach

    “Enjoy looking at the moon with foods and sake on the boat, and reading haiku under the moonlight. I didn’t make haiku, but I carved a cute little bunny and hid it in Prospect Park.”

    Illustration: Brendan Leach

    “Walk on a path past a giant letter y, a giant letter x and a giant letter w, all on your right. Directly after the w, take the steep, well-traveled dirt path until it comes to some steps. Go up! You are getting close.”

    Illustration: Brendan Leach

    “You’ll be starting your journey on 164th Street at either entrance of Kissena Park. You must stay to the right of the lake, pass the flagpole, pass three light poles and three benches. See the tree with a ‘face’?”

    Illustration: Brendan Leach

    “Your starting point is the Bronx Parkway Gate. Head into the zoo the only way you can. Keep going, don’t FLY off the trail. When you come to the fork in the road, PREY that you are following the path the CHILDREN would want to.…”

    See previous Map


    • Comments
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    • 47751 cindy Mon, Oct 06, at 05:52pm
      Well... I happen to think sitting on a couch all day watching football, or basketball, or any sports for that matter is SUPERDORKY! I would much rather be finding a letterbox ANYDAY!

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 47651 Mama Bear Mon, Oct 06, at 02:24pm
      and the mere mention of requiring a shovel makes me just shudder... PLEASE, NO SHOVELS while letterboxing!!!!!!!!!

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 47621 Lady Muffy Mon, Oct 06, at 01:46pm
      why be so quick to judge as "superdorky" We letterboxers are enjoying our selves and staying fit and visiting new places. If things are found in the letterboxes then perhaps your rage should be at geocashing they leave things. . Perhaps you should get off your out of shape A** and actually try the clues only try ones out of the city or even try a mystery and not get lost. Letterboxing is an outdoor hobby that combines elements of orienteering, art and puzzle solving.

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 47611 Tess Mon, Oct 06, at 01:43pm
      This writer clearly knows very little about letterboxing. The boxes have hand-carved stamps in them, some of which took many, many hours to carve, and therefore are not "worthless". This is folk art and people collect it. Also, these clues should not have been published since the boxes may be compromised by non-letterboxers reading this article. And what kind of person, other than a teenager, is so shallow they even care whether the 150-yr-old hobby is trendy or "dorky"? It's neither.

      Flag as inappropriate



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